the search for extraterrestrial lifephysics.gmu.edu/~hgeller/astr103/searchlifec.pdf ·...
TRANSCRIPT
1
The Search for Extraterrestrial
Life
2
Guiding Questions
1. What role could comets and meteorites have played in the origin of life on Earth?
2. Have spacecraft found any evidence for life elsewhere in our solar system?
3. Do meteorites from Mars give conclusive proof that life originated there?
4. How likely is it that other civilizations exist in our Galaxy?
5. How do astronomers search for evidence of civilizations on planets orbiting other stars?
6. Will it ever be possible to see Earthlike planets orbiting other stars?
3
A Universe of Life
• Searching for life everywhere
• Planets, stars, galaxies, Big Bang– Conception of size
and distance
• Stars and the origins of chemicals
• Formation of planets• Defining astrobiology
– the science
4
The Science of Life in the Universe
• Ancient cosmologies• Science as a way of
knowing• Copernicus, Galileo,
Kepler, Newton• Pseudoscience and
nonsense
5
The Nature of Life
• What is it?• Cells• Metabolism• DNA• Extremophiles
6
The chemical building blocks of life are found throughout space
• All life on Earth, and presumably on other worlds, depends on organic (carbon-based) molecules
• These molecules occur naturally throughout interstellar space
• Organic molecules needed for life to originate were possibly brought to the young Earth by comets or asteroids, as well as being formed on Earth
7
The Geological History of the Earth
• Geologic Timescale• Plate Tectonics• Solid Earth• Greenhouse Effect• Relative/Absolute
Dating
8
The Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth
• Origin of Life• Prokaryotes• Eukaryotes• Oxygen in Air• Impacts &
Extinctions• Human
Evolution
9
• Another likely source for organic molecules is chemical reactions in the Earth’s primitive atmosphere
• Similar processes may occur on other worlds
10
Searching for Life in the Solar System
• Environmental Needs
• In the Solar System
11
Mars
• Science Fiction• Search for Life• Martian Meteorites• Exploration
12
NASA rovers that reached Mars in 2004 landed at locations that may once have been covered in water
• The unsuccessful Beagle 2 mission to Mars was to carry out a different set of biological experiments on samples taken from the interiors of rocks
13
The Viking Lander spacecraft searched for microorganisms on the Martian surface, but found no conclusive sign of their presence
14
A so-called “Face” on Mars
15
16
Meteorites from Mars have been scrutinized for life-forms
• An ancient Martian rock that came to Earth as a meteorite was examined for evidence that microorganisms once existed on Mars
• This has not been corroborated
17
Life on Jovian Moons
• Europa• Titan• Others
18
Europa and Mars best potential for life to have evolved
• Besides Earth, only two worlds in our solar system—the planet Mars and Jupiter’s satellite Europa—may have had the right conditions for the origin of life
• Mars once had liquid water on its surface, though it has none today
• Life may have originated on Mars during the liquid water era
• Europa appears to have extensive liquid water beneath its icy surface– Future missions may search
for the presence of life
19
The Nature and Evolution of Habitability
• Habitability Zone– Past, Present,
Future
20
The Search for Habitable Worlds
• Planet Formation• Extrasolar Planets
– Detection• Earth-like Planets?
21
Infrared telescopes in space began searching for Earthlike planets
• A new generation of orbiting telescopes may be able to detect terrestrial planets around nearby stars
• If such planets are found, their infrared spectra may reveal the presence or absence of life
22
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
• SETI• Drake Equation
23
The Drake equation helps scientists estimate how many civilizations may inhabit our Galaxy
24
Interstellar Travel
• How realistic?– Engineering– Limited by c
• Relativity and time dilation• Wormholes and
hyperspace?
25
The Fermi Paradox
• Where are the aliens?• Galactic colonization• Resolving the
paradox
26
Contact – Implications of the Search and Discovery
• Can we make contact– Which kind 1st, 2nd, 3rd
• Contact implications
27
Radio searches for alien civilizations are under way
• No signs of intelligent life have yet been detected– searches are continuing
and using increasingly sophisticated techniques
• The so-called water hole is a range of radio frequencies in which there is little noise and little absorption by the Earth’s atmosphere– scientists suggest that
this noise-free region would be well suited for interstellar communication
28
If an alien civilization were someday to find this message, which of the features on the plaque do you
think would be easily understandable to them?
29
Astrobiology in One Sentence
• The universe is unimaginably large, and alive; you are not at the center of the universe; and, the way to know the universe is through science.
» Dr. Harold Geller
HAVE A GREAT SUMMER